Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one is forced to have an international room mate. If that is issue just dont allow international students to mix dorm rooms
My daughter has a three female roomates, MD, one NJ, one LI and one in MA. None are international and all live at home. All our between 19-21
They have a four bedroom apt
Issue is it's already about to be June 1st and there's no word yet on an international travel being allowed. So when it is finally allowed, you want ZERO trial period -- few weeks, maybe a month or two -- to see if Corona outbreak happens again? You want international air to open and couple weeks later 5-20% of your kid's college is full of international kids?
Anonymous wrote:No one is forced to have an international room mate. If that is issue just dont allow international students to mix dorm rooms
My daughter has a three female roomates, MD, one NJ, one LI and one in MA. None are international and all live at home. All our between 19-21
They have a four bedroom apt
Anonymous wrote:No one is forced to have an international room mate. If that is issue just dont allow international students to mix dorm rooms
My daughter has a three female roomates, MD, one NJ, one LI and one in MA. None are international and all live at home. All our between 19-21
They have a four bedroom apt
Anonymous wrote:No one is forced to have an international room mate. If that is issue just dont allow international students to mix dorm rooms
My daughter has a three female roomates, MD, one NJ, one LI and one in MA. None are international and all live at home. All our between 19-21
They have a four bedroom apt
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, ina world where Memorial Day 2020 looks like this, I’m sure you are not the only one.
https://www.kmov.com/news/watch-packed-pool-party-at-lake-of-the-ozarks-shows-crowd-ignoring-social-distancing-guidelines/article_5de50ce8-9dbb-11ea-bd46-6b8e99107093.html
But most people understand in person college comes with increased risk. This issue is, is the risk worth the pay off?
Good for them. If you don't feel this is a safe place for you, then don't go. Stop taking away people's choices.
Anonymous wrote:The fact is, students came back to college campuses from across the country, Europe, and China after Christmas break, when clearly the virus was already circulating, and were there for 2 and a half months and there isn't one report of transmission on a college campus. The risk is just very low not only to get ill from contracting the virus, but even for spreading it, among this age group.
Anonymous wrote:College students make notoriously poor choices on health and safety issues, particularly in social contexts where alcohol is involved. When I was in college there was an outbreak of meningitis on campus with multiple students hospitalized. The college sent out all kinds of safety guidelines for minimizing your risk of exposure, but that Saturday there was a huge party when one of the frats wanted to try out their new shot luge. The number of students lining up to put their mouths up against the same surface someone else had their mouth against moments before, despite all the warnings we’d been getting for days, was horrifying.
Anonymous wrote:OP, ina world where Memorial Day 2020 looks like this, I’m sure you are not the only one.
https://www.kmov.com/news/watch-packed-pool-party-at-lake-of-the-ozarks-shows-crowd-ignoring-social-distancing-guidelines/article_5de50ce8-9dbb-11ea-bd46-6b8e99107093.html
But most people understand in person college comes with increased risk. This issue is, is the risk worth the pay off?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two daughters who should be going back to college in Fall. If anything them going back to college is far safer than being home virus wise. I say that as both daughters now have lost their summer jobs. Both are doing Instcart and Doordash. It seems all their friends are in gig economy. So they are in multiple supermarkets and restaurants every day. My one daughter is Mall opens will go back.
On top of that majority of older daughters friends including her are going back to college in Fall if virtual or not. My older daughter has three roomates and a lease. The school nearly all Juniors and Seniors live off campus and apartments are not refunding if no school.
So exactly how does not having a Fall session in person help? My older daughter her small college town had zero cases of COVID when she left to head back to DC area with a lot of cases. I dont see point.
Am I only one?
That small college town that and zero cases back in the spring probably doesn’t have adequate medical facilities to deal with a massive outbreak. Thousands of college students flooding back from all over the country/world is practically guaranteed to spread it like wildfire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, ina world where Memorial Day 2020 looks like this, I’m sure you are not the only one.
https://www.kmov.com/news/watch-packed-pool-party-at-lake-of-the-ozarks-shows-crowd-ignoring-social-distancing-guidelines/article_5de50ce8-9dbb-11ea-bd46-6b8e99107093.html
But most people understand in person college comes with increased risk. This issue is, is the risk worth the pay off?
OP - my point is it is less risk. My daughter would be limited to roommates and class. As opposed to 20 supermarkets a week and her Mall job when reopens. The kids are all working now. At school at least limited